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T O P I C    R E V I E W
Ampdoctor Posted - 06 Nov 2018 : 15:10:59
Have any of you moved to 4K monitors to reduce the need to zoom in and out as much?
If so did you experience any problems or drawbacks with 4K?

Thanks!

12   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Ampdoctor Posted - 15 Nov 2018 : 13:17:22
Yep, remember tape and donut with the blue gridded polyester film, everything made double size then photographically reduced.
It'd take an afternoon to move a few components around and reconnect all the traces. Something that might take a few minutes now.
John Baraclough Posted - 13 Nov 2018 : 22:51:29
The first time I used Easy-PC it was the DOS version on two 5ΒΌ inch floppy discs, one for the program and one for the libraries. I think they were double density so would have been 720kB each! The screen was 640x480 which was amazing!

It must have been about 1988.

-------------------------------------------------------
Birthdays are good for you: the more you have, the longer you live ... and I've had lots of them so I should know!
jlawton Posted - 13 Nov 2018 : 19:13:42
If I recall correctly when Easy-PC was launched, it was on an Amstrad PC-1512 colour monitor.
I saw it at an exhibition many years ago..
Somewhat mistakenly at the time I went for another CAD system that had the advantage of linking schematic and layout using a netlist, but it ended up being inferior to EPC and if I dare call it that, the spin-off, Boardmaker.

John
Iain Wilkie Posted - 13 Nov 2018 : 19:02:35
Yes .... and the monitors were GREEN !!

Iain
edrees Posted - 13 Nov 2018 : 16:14:02
320 x 200 AND 4 colours? Luxury!
In my days we had a scalpel and black sticky tape! CRTs were very largely monochrome & 24 bit colour resolution was inconceivable in those "good" old days when beer was less than 2 shillings (10 new pence) a pint!

DavidM Posted - 13 Nov 2018 : 15:37:40
Hands up all those who can remember the original PC colour monitor at 320x200 with just 4 colours? I remember the fun and games we had getting a CAD program designed and built for that beast! I'm sure my bedside clock has better graphics than that!

David.
jlawton Posted - 13 Nov 2018 : 15:08:55
You were lucky. In my day....

John
Ampdoctor Posted - 09 Nov 2018 : 10:53:30
Thank you for the feedback.

I found it was the graphics card causing aliasing issues, now with an nVidia Quadro 4000 installed I have a pin sharp display.
Dual screen setup works a treat, 4K screen seems to give me more of a benefit on schematics.
Can't imagine how I ever got by on a 17" iyama CRT all those years ago...
edrees Posted - 09 Nov 2018 : 10:10:34
I have a dual monitor set up with an Asus Radeon Graphics Card. EasyPC normally launches into the Main (RHS) monitor, but I can then minimise this instance and then drag the left hand side of the minimised EasyPC instance over to the left hand side of the LHS monitor. Then, I maximise the height of the windows to fit both monitors. I can then arrange the schematics on the left hand monitor and the PCB on the right hand monitor without any of the pitfalls of using the EasyPC "Dual Screen" configuration. Works a treat.
jlawton Posted - 09 Nov 2018 : 09:47:48
Yes, but I've never seen the point in doing that, as my monitor is not super-wide.


John
DavidM Posted - 09 Nov 2018 : 09:05:55
Worth remembering though, running Easy-PC in "dual screen" mode doesn't actually require two monitors, it will arrange itself side-by-side on a single monitor if that is all there is, or indeed you can arrange them to do that on one screen even if you do have two. Perhaps it could more accurately be termed "dual instance" mode. We even know of people using six monitors, although how they avoid getting dizzy from scanning around so much screen space is beyond me!

David
jlawton Posted - 08 Nov 2018 : 18:43:52
Yes, years ago, I wouldn't go back. I have Dell 30" 2560 x 1600 screens.
A drawback is you might still want two monitors so you can have separate screens for schematic & layout and you may need a bigger desk :)

John